iker-wearing cow,| name is Bessie. nal Agency also! rs for a TV il in Georgia, “Dyiii . Hedgecoth’s ;ot bit parts, tesn’t have a part; 11 find it—andtrais] dl us and say you in that will walkom I'll tell you,‘Youfj ’ she said. e charged SlOOan l nat they payforisll ir know-how in kl ie animals," she said | he Battalion jesday, November 29, 1988 College Station, Texas )r. JANUARY 1 /, January 18,IS! Center RULES:!! Men's and tiveC -NoviceCIa RDS: ClassA-T-s ral Motors forspc -shirts. SCHEDU 8 at 4 PM in 167! layer on its rostei Vol. 88 No. 65 USPS 045360 10 Pages Communists back Kremlin in restructure Jon Mostyn, a sophomore industrial distribution major, pounds the pavement over Welborn Road Monday. Photo by Jay Janner ASA starts ‘invisible’ countdown or launch of shuttle, secret payload APE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) NASA set an invisible countdown- ck in motion Monday for Thurs- y’s launch of space shuttle Atlantis th five military men who report- ly will deploy the $500 million La- Dsse satellite to spy on the Soviet lion. NASA and the Pentagon say the ght and its cargo are top-secret, it reports have circulated widely out the satellite, and even the So il Union has discussed the mission rough its news agency, Tass. The weather could be a problem r launch day. A preliminary forecast for Thurs- ly called for overcast sky, brisk nds and isolated rainshowers — ifavorable conditions that would event NASA from giving the go- lead for liftoff. iThe astronauts flew here Monday ternoon from their training base Houston and their commander, avy Cmdr. Robert L. Gibson, told porters, “We’re ready to go; the crew is 'excited about the mission, No information has been made and we-’re anxious to be- under way.” public-about the number 1 or-length He said he hoped for good weather on Thursday. The crew members have been in structed not to discuss their mission publicly, and when a reporter shouted a question about the flight, Gibson smiled and said, “Good to see you.” The pilot is Air Force Lt. Col. Guy S. Gardner, and the mission special ists are Col. Richard M. Mullane and Lt. Col. Jerry L. Ross of the Air Force, and Navy Cmdr. William M. Shepherd. The countdown started shortly af ter midnight, but because the mis sion is classified, countdown displays normally monitored by the news me dia were blank. NASA and the Defense Depart ment made periodic reports that all was well but said they wanted to keep the precise progress of the count secret to hide the exact time of launch. of planned “holds,” when the clock would normally be stopped. Officials have said Atlantis will lift off sometime between 6:32 a.m. and 9:32 a.m. Thursday. Reliable sources have said the launch will occur about 7 a.m. if weather and other conditions are ad equate. Defense Department officials con tend the secrecy makes it more diffi cult for Soviet satellites and spy ships operating off Cape Canaveral to monitor the flight and learn its pur pose. Critics argue that such secrecy is unnecessary because the Soviets, with their intelligence capabilities, already know a great deal about the mission. In fact, the official Soviet news agency Tass said Sunday, “The main task of the secret mission is to put into near-Earth orbit a new genera tion reconnaissance satellite, code- named Lacrosse. The satellite will conduct surveillance of the territory of the Soviet Union with the help of updated radar.” MOSCOW (AP) — The Commu nist Party Central Committee on Monday endorsed constitutional changes that critics say give the Kremlin too much power, setting the stage for approval over the objection of several restive republics. Officials in Estonia, the tiny Baltic republic that led the challenge to Kremlin authority by declaring its sovereignty in internal policy and its right to review all new Soviet legis lation, said they would stand firm despite a ruling the move was un constitutional. The more than 300 members of the party’s policy-making body, meeting on the eve of an extraordi nary meeting of the Supreme Soviet, or national parliament, declared the amendments “will mean a major step along the road of democratization of Soviet society,” the official Tass news agency said. It instructed President and Com munist Party chief Mikhail S. Gorba chev to make a report on the amend ments to the Supreme Soviet. The Central Committee promised election campaigns “unlike all the previous ones as real competitive ness of candidates is introduced in the political life of the country,” Tass said. Gorbachev proposed the amend ments to make the system more democratic, but the Estonians, as well as activists in Latvia, Lithuania, Armenia, and Georgia have crit icized them for taking away some of the local control that Gorbachev has said he wants to foster. They say the amendments take away the right of the 15 Soviet re publics to secede, giving a new 2,250-member Congress of People’s Deputies the right to determine the boundaries of the Soviet Union. Those republics have demanded major changes in the amendments, or that they be rejected outright. Some legislators from the small re publics have said they will object in the Supreme Soviet, but they most likely will be far outnumbered by deputies from much bigger repub lics such as Russia and the Ukraine. The amendments were approved by the Presidium of the Supreme So viet, the Soviet government’s highest executive body, on Saturday with unspecified changes resulting from complaints and suggestions included in more than 250,000 letters. Gorbachev and the Presidium flatly declared Estonia’s move un constitutional. In a speech made public Sunday night, Gorbachev accused the Esto nian leadership of undermining the unity of the Soviet Union, and used the word “crisis” to describe the con frontation between Estonia and Moscow. “Our future is not in weakening ties among the republics, but in strengthening them, in broadening cooperation,” Gorbachev said in the speech, which was delivered Satur day to the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet. Estonian Communist Party leader Vaijno Vyalas, speaking on tele vision in the republic late Sunday, told Estonians, “We will not retreat,” according to Valle Feldman of the republic’s Foreign Ministry. “Only the Estonian parliament can change the decisions of the Esto nian parliament,” Feldman said. “We have rights, and Moscow has rights, too.” T he Central Committee said party organizations must work out several unclear points of relations between Moscow and the republics on the ba sis of “the course of the party for widening the rights of union repub lics and autonomous formations,” but that the Soviet Constitution must be strictly observed. It said that questions of ethnic re lations must be fully discussed with local officials before a plenum is held next year on the subject, and expressed confidence that any prob lem could be worked out. In other action, the Central Com mittee expelled one full member, In- amzhon Usmankhodaheyev, and two candidate members, Ismail Dz- habbarov and Akil Salimov, named by a leading magazine editor earlier this year in a bribery case. In a speech to the Communist Party conference at the Kremlin in June, Ogonyok magazine editor Vi taly Korotich had accused four un identified Uzbekistan officials of ac cepting bribes. UPD stakeouts during holiday net two suspected auto burglars :xTSEMEsi„hristmas celebrations ancelled in Bethlehem Mon-Thu 3RM liBBETHLEHEM, Occupied West dent IDorTAMufr* ^. P) -T The Pale £ tinian to . wa Where Christ was born has canceled >allS for $1.50. v. j ts trac |i t j ona | j 0 y 0us Christmas cele- t for $2.00. Clubfilbrations in because of the year-long id or call 845-7Kf evo * l: a g a i nst Israeli occupation. ■ “We don’t see any reason to cele- ——...-dfate Christmas,” Deputy Mayor ■anna Nasser said Monday. B“We have to show concern for our ■fad nnd for our detainees,” he sa id. eld to determine a:| More than 300 Palestinians have in 5:30 PM,Tue,Mai»en killed and 5,000 arrested since mural Champion8S»e uprising began Dec. 8, 1987, in 'M be included inlhl^e occupied West Bank and Gaza Ting Intramural-Reef‘P- which Israel captured from April 17 and will R fe hat be^Wn 1967 rebellion was three weeks old, pro vided a foretaste. Mayor Elias Freij canceled the Christmas Eve reception and the Boy Scout parade was smaller, but streamers and lights went up in the square and the tree blazed with blinking neon balls. Only about 2,500 visitors came, 75 percent fewer than in 1986. Some were kept away by the driv ing rain but others apparently feared the violence. By Stephen Masters Senior Staff Writer University Police stakeouts over the Thanks giving holiday netted two juveniles suspected of breaking into at least 11 vehicles on the Texas A&M campus. UPD Director Bob Wiatt said officers who staked out in Parking Area 61, better known as the Fish Lot, heard glass break. He said they no ticed a Camaro with its headlights turned off and two individuals running from car to car. Both suspects are 16, he said. One is from Hearne and the other was listed as a missing per son from Pasadena, Texas, he said. Authorities have since said the youth is a runaway, Wiatt said. He said he believes the parents of the runaway have been contacted. Both are being held in the Brazos County Ju venile Detention Center for felony burglary of a motor vehicle, punishable by up to 20 years, he said. But even if convicted, the suspects will be released when they turn 18. The names of the suspects cannot be released because they arejuveniles, Wiatt said. Because the incidents occurred over the holi day, so far only four of the owners of vandalized vehicles have been contacted by UPD. In addition to the seven vehicles broken into in PA 61, one each in PA 24 and PA 40 behind the Commons, one in PA 39 behind Cain Hall and one on Clark Street west of the MSC were van dalized, Wiatt said. Six of the 11 vehicles broken into were Camaros, he said. Wiatt said the suspects’ Camaro was “stuffed to the gills” with several thousand dollars worth of stolen items, including equalizers, CB radios, checkbooks and a garage door opener. “They took everything that wasn’t nailed down and even some stuff that was,” he said. Wiatt estimated the damage at near $7,000 and the value of the property recovered at about $2,000. In another incident Thursday, a Texas A&M student and a Sam Houston State University stu dent were arrested for misdemeanor criminal mischief for flattening tires on four vehicles in PA 61, Wiatt said. The type of misdemeanor can not be determined until the value of the tires is determined. The valve stems on the tires were completely removed, he said. Both were released pending charges. The names of the two students will not be released unless charges are filed, Wiatt said. Wiatt said two vehicles were hit by both the valve stem removers and the thieves, but said the two crimes were not related. Wiatt said the stakeouts were initiated to pre vent people from taking advantage of the de creased number of students on campus during the holiday. The stakeouts began on the night of Nov. 23 and continued through Sunday. Delta crash blamed on mechanical failure IALS m o] r d Bavi I'w Six Palestinians from Bethlehem fcd surrounding refugee camps lave been killed and hundreds are ong the total of more than 7,000 lounded. ■ A spokesman for the Israeli mili- ■ry government said he was un- ople interest t ware of the decision and declined .. Comment. meting Mono® Cancellation would be a blow to matinn rall™ rae ^ at a t * me w h en much of the IMculUM, UdlllpfQj-iti f ocuses it s attention on Beth- Ifthem. Nasser told the Associated Press e town government called off all ficial celebrations, such as the hristmas Eve reception for Israeli fcd Palestinian dignitaries and the finnual Boy Scout parade. ■ Manger Square, usually decorated ilding so comeo#? bri S ht srr ! n S s of colored lights, • * k ■'ll remain dark and its 40-foot le is to be annOU(lBj lr istin aS tree wall be left bare, he RSVP by DecemlX T , , I East year s Christmas, when the GRAPEVINE (AP) — On the eve of a hearing by the National Trans portation Safety Board, the Air Line Pilots Association announced Mon day that mechanical failure, not hu man error, caused the crash that killed 14 people. An airline pilots’ union says fed eral investigators are focusing on “premature findings of pilot error” in the August crash of Delta Flight 1141. Evidence the NTSB gathered from wreckage revealed that the plane’s flaps were not in takeoff po sition, and NTSB investigators found the flap lever set wrong. But pilot union representatives said it is likely that the three-person flight crew of the Boeing 727 prop erly set the plane’s wing flaps. They said a mechanical problem set in mo tion a sequence of events that led to the crash. “It would seem to us that there has been a premature and automatic finding of pilot error,” Capt. Jim Gray, Delta spokesman for the Air Line Pilot’s Association, said. “A finding of pilot error was probably made on the first day — the very first day.” NTSB spokesman Mike Benson said the agency has reached no con clusions. “The hearings start tomorrow and they’re going to be full and comple te,” Benson said Monday. “Nobody’s prejudged anything.” The union argues the airplane may have had a malfunction called “split-flap configuration.” ALPA spokesman John Mazor said the wing flaps may have stuck in opposing positions — one up, one down — robbing the plane of power and lift. Mazor said the union’s theory an swers many questions surrounding the Aug. 31 accident at Dallas-Fort Worth International Airport, in Grapevine. It explains the airplane’s unusu ally long roll before taking off near the end of the runway, the aircraft’s pitch to the right, the stall of the five engine compressors and the snap the crew heard before takeoff, he said. It also shifts blame from the pi lots. The cockpit voice recorder picked up the second officer acknowledging the proper flap setting, but NTSB officials have said the plane’s out moded flight data recorder pro vided little help. Transcripts of conversations amoncr Fliorhf 1 141’s rrew members included an 18-minute social visit to the cockpit by a flight attendant while the plane was waiting for take off. Gray said a “quick and dirty inves tigation” by federal officials might result in a finding of pilot error. He also said it appears, based on indica tions such as the list of witnesses for this week’s hearing, that NTSB offi cials are targeting Delta and the Fed eral Aviation Administration for the agency’s relationship with the air line. NTSB investigators have stressed that no conclusions will be released during the hearing. The board’s fi nal report isn’t expected for six months. Benson also said the witness list was agreed on several weeks ago by all the parties involved, including the pilots union. Investigators already have charted the plane’s wreckage and in terviewed those aboard the plane and other witnesses. The plane’s three engines also were analyzed. Thirteen people died as the plane split open and the fuselage exploded in flames just off a south runway at the airport. Another man later died of injuries suffered as he tried to make his way back onto the burning plane to save his trapped wife. But 94 others aboard the Salt Lake City-bound plane survived. That’s another reason federal offi cials are taking such a careful look at Flight 1141. Scrutiny of another Delta crash at D-FW Airport also resumes Tuesday in Texas. A trial to assess liability in the 1985 crash of Delta Flight 191 was to resume in Fort Worth.